Levaillant, Denis: Paysages de Conte

Levaillant, Denis SKU: 21701672
Levaillant, Denis: Paysages de Conte

Levaillant, Denis: Paysages de Conte

Levaillant, Denis SKU: 21701672

Format: CD

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Title: Paysages de Conte
Artist: Levaillant, Denis
Label: DLM Editions
Product Type: COMPACT DISCS
UPC: 9782953951844
Genre: Classical Artists

The ear's eye A French composer is always astonished when a foreigner says to him, by way of a compliment, that his score sounds very 'French'. Because a composer first of all writes music that he carries within him and he would be quite embarrassed were someone to commission a work of 'French music' from him... In revealing that he sought in his ballet La Petite danseuse de Degas 'a new French color in the harmony and texture, a clear, distinct, detailed, and sometimes also strange, sound,' Denis Levaillant nonetheless put his finger on what might possibly establish a connection between Debussy and Berlioz, Boulez and Rameau, Massenet and Lully or Varèse and Saint-Saëns. Possibly... However, it would considerably reduce the significance and originality of his music to consider it only as a prism of archetypical elements. Moreover, ignoring boundaries, Denis Levaillant dedicated Les Couleurs de la parole to the memory of Rimsky-Korsakov 'who invented the orchestra of modern colors'. Would the composer of Scheherazade recognize himself in it? Beyond the differences in language, the combination of unexpected timbres (violins and alto flute at the beginning), the integration of percussion, the brief appearance of a muted trumpet and, generally speaking, the touch of unreality, justify the dedication. We shall not attempt to know whether freedom belongs exclusively to the French, but the fact remains that it is a fundamental given of Levaillant's creative approach. Freedom of form, inspired by the unpredictable structure of the narrative, manifesting itself by a tendency to juxtapose, at times impulsively (the abrupt changes of topic in Le Bestiaire enchanté), rather than develop. Which does not prevent him, when he feels like it, from engaging in very tight thematic work as in the first movement of his concerto Écho de Narcisse. Freedom of language: free atonality not excluding polarisations (Les Couleurs de la parole or La Femme sur la lune), straightforward tonality (La Petite danseuse de Degas or the middle movement of Écho de Narcisse), or modality (Paysages de conte). Finally, freedom of style, synthesizing the learned and the popular, the so-called 'contemporary' aesthetic (electro-acoustic or not) and jazz: the tutti of La Chute bring to mind jazz choruses, but elsewhere, the added notes, the enharmonic modulations, and the distortions of timbres bear witness to the stamp of swing, blues and even rock... Like Rimsky-Korsakov and his French emulators, Levaillant excels at advantageously placing glittering timbres: glockenspiel, chimes, xylophone (L'Agitation de la ville) and high woodwind trills (Le Cortège du Roi Bleu). Inversely, he also has a taste for woody sonorities that are rough on the ear just as certain wines are rough on the palate: those of the oboe (and even the oboe d'amore in La Vitrine), the bassoon in the upper register (Le Tourbillon du bal), the saxophone and clarinets in trills (Le Voyage dans l'espace), the husky sounds of the horns, so eloquent in La Fusée, or the bass clarinet harmonics that choke in Le Bestiaire enchanté. Although the beginning of L'Enchantement displays a gripping, Ravelian diaphanousness, brilliance can also result from the contrast with dark timbres, a complementarily so striking in Le Réveil de la Nature. Similarly, the beginning of Écho de Narcisse, wherein the low timbres devour each other, reveals the luminous strength of black, this seeming paradox exalted so intensely in the paintings of Soulages. Sometimes, it is true, the density of the polyphony revels in Brahmsian dark hues (especially in Les Coulers de la parole), but it is most often lightened by the overlap of clearly differentiated timbres as in Le Voyage dans l'espace, to mention only one example. Air circulates between the parts, as already recommended by Bizet. By another aspect, Denis Levaillant lies within a tradition going back to the writings of Rameau on the natural harmony stemming from the resonance of the sound body. Thus, La Lune solicits the right falseness of certain harmonic sounds of the natural horn; in Le Rêve d'une vie the glissandi of harmonic sounds in the strings challenge the notion of tempered accuracy. La Statue evokes certain realisations of the 'spectral' school (Grisey, Murail, Dufourt) with the gaze turned rather towards the harmonic aggregates of jazz. What might have been mentioned first is the dramatic, almost cinematographic, quality of this music: a colorist, so that it might be better seen in imagination (La Prison or, at opposite extreme, the ineffable melody of the central movement of Écho de Narcisse), Levaillant pushes fantasising in sound as far as possible. Bracing and luxuriant, Le Cortège du Roi Bleu solicits complicity; Le Tourbillon du bal and La Fin du bal make the ear's eye travel. Richly inventive studio experience legitimates the dedication to Edgar Varèse ('for his symphonic utopia') of the spellbinding Drama Symphony, which, in multiplying the resources of the symphony orchestra, makes the connection between Pierre Schaeffer's Treatise on Musical Objects and Berlioz's Treatise on Modern Instrumentation and Orchestration. Gérard Condé Translated by John Tyler Tuttle.

Tracks:
1.1 Echo de Narcisse, DLM 0019: 1
1.2 Echo de Narcisse, DLM 0019: 2
1.3 Echo de Narcisse, DLM 0019: 3
1.4 Paysages de Conte, DLM 0010: 1. L'enchantement
1.5 Paysages de Conte, DLM 0010: 2. Le Bestiaire Enchanté
1.6 Paysages de Conte, DLM 0010: 3. Le Réveil de la Nature
1.7 Paysages de Conte, DLM 0010: 4. Le Cortège Du Roi Bleu
1.8 Paysages de Conte, DLM 0010: 5. Le Tourbillon Du Bal
1.9 La Petite Danseuse Suite N°1, DLM 0026: 1. La Vitrine
1.10 La Petite Danseuse Suite N°1, DLM 0026: 2. L'agitation de la Ville
1.11 La Petite Danseuse Suite N°1, DLM 0026: 3. La Statue
1.12 La Petite Danseuse Suite N°1, DLM 0026: 4. La Chute
1.13 La Petite Danseuse Suite N°1, DLM 0026: 5. La Prison
1.14 La Petite Danseuse Suite N°1, DLM 0026: 6. La Fin Du Bal
2.1 Les Couleurs de la Parole, DLM 0004: 1
2.2 Les Couleurs de la Parole, DLM 0004: 2
2.3 Les Couleurs de la Parole, DLM 0004: 3
2.4 Les Couleurs de la Parole, DLM 0004: 4
2.5 Les Couleurs de la Parole, DLM 0004: 5
2.6 Les Couleurs de la Parole, DLM 0004: 6
2.7 Les Couleurs de la Parole, DLM 0004: 7
2.8 Les Couleurs de la Parole, DLM 0004: 8
2.9 Les Couleurs de la Parole, DLM 0004: 9
2.10 Drama Symphony, DLM 0008: 1. La Découverte Du Mystère
2.11 Drama Symphony, DLM 0008: 2. Menace D'une Folie
2.12 Drama Symphony, DLM 0008: 3. Carnaval Nocturne
2.13 Drama Symphony, DLM 0008: 4. Etendue Intérieure
2.14 Drama Symphony, DLM 0008: 5. Danse Solennelle
2.15 Drama Symphony, DLM 0008: 6. Final Tragique
2.16 La Femme Sur la Lune, DLM 0011: 1. La Lune
2.17 La Femme Sur la Lune, DLM 0011: 2. La Science
2.18 La Femme Sur la Lune, DLM 0011: 3. Le Rêve D'une Vie
2.19 La Femme Sur la Lune, DLM 0011: 4. La Fusée
2.20 La Femme Sur la Lune, DLM 0011: 5. Le Danger
2.21 La Femme Sur la Lune, DLM 0011: 6. Le Voyage Dans L'espace

Audio Sample:
All soundclips are provided by Tidal and are for illustrative purposes only. For some releases, the tracks listed may not accurately represent the tracks on the physical release.
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